Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Diabetes work gives new hope for ‘cure’

- JONATHAN WOSEN

A century ago, type 1 diabetes was a death sentence. But San Diego biotech ViaCyte says two studies published last week show the company is getting closer to what it calls a “functional cure” for the disease.

The pair of studies, published earlier this month, are based on an early-stage clinical trial in which the company implanted small devices beneath the skin of type 1 diabetics. These devices were loaded with pancreatic cells, which researcher­s showed could grow into cell types that naturally keep your blood sugar from dipping too low or suddenly spiking.

The hope is that this approach, known as cell replacemen­t therapy, could allow type 1 diabetics to ditch the needles, syringes and pumps they use to constantly monitor their blood sugar. But first, the reported findings, based on the first batch of patients to join an ongoing study, must hold up as the trial expands and in follow-up trials. And ViaCyte is still tinkering with its device to trigger insulin production more consistent­ly and robustly.

Still, the latest findings are sparking genuine optimism from a company that’s run into numerous twists and turns in its quest to treat what remains a difficult and devastatin­g disease.

“The cells that we are implanting actually work — they secrete insulin,” said Dr. Howard Foyt, ViaCyte’s chief medical officer. “We’ve done it already. So it’s just a question of being able to reproduce those results in a greater number of patients.”

The recent studies come about a month after Vertex, a Massachuse­tts biotech company, also announced that it has made progress toward a cell-based therapy for type 1 diabetes.

It’s all part of an effort to help those struggling with a disease that affects 1.6 million Americans, according to the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation. Type 1 diabetics often suffer from constant exhaustion, weight loss and increased thirst and urination, among other symptoms.

Things can get worse without treatment, leading to heart, kidney and nerve damage. A second-century Greek physician once described diabetes as “the melting down of flesh and limbs into urine.”

At the source of these patients’ woes is friendly fire from their own immune systems, which wipe out the cells in the pancreas that make insulin, a hormone that regulates blood sugar levels. And while type 1 diabetics can inject themselves with insulin and use glucose monitors to track their blood sugar, these fixes are expensive and not always effective.

ViaCyte is betting that replenishi­ng these lost cells would be a more lasting solution. Researcher­s have known for about 20 years that transplant­ing pancreatic cells from organ donors can trigger insulin production, but there’s not enough donor tissue to keep pace with demand. So the biotech is using stem cells, which can be grown in bulk and coaxed to form virtually any of the body’s cells.

One of the company’s implants, known as PEC-Direct, is about half the size of a credit card and loaded with millions of pancreatic cells derived from stem cells. These cells can further develop into beta cells, which produce insulin and lower blood sugar, and alpha cells, which make glucagon, a hormone that raises blood sugar.

Foyt thinks the combinatio­n of both cell types could avoid a silent but deadly problem for some type 1 diabetics — dangerousl­y low blood sugar that starves the brain of glucose, leading to comas, seizures or even death.

The biotech’s small, flexible device slips beneath the skin — usually under a person’s forearm or the sides of their lower back — and is covered with teeny pores that let blood vessels snake inside and supply cells with oxygen and fresh nutrients. But those pores also allow the patient’s immune cells to attack the transplant­ed cells, so recipients need immunesupp­ressing drugs to keep the new cells alive.

The company is also exploring whether it can geneticall­y modify the cells so that immunosupp­ressants won’t be necessary, but that effort is still at an early stage.

ViaCyte, founded in 1999, has about 125 employees in Torrey Pines. In that time, it’s come up with a number of ways to deliver pancreatic cells to diabetes, none of which has yet to receive regulatory approval. But Foyt’s convinced the company is on the right track.

“Over the last seven to eight years, we’ve been going step by step, overcoming one obstacle only to encounter another,” he said. “There’s no doubt in our mind that the cells work. The challenge has been the engineerin­g to figure out how to get the cells into the body in a way that will allow the cells to do their thing.”

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